[Dialogue] General Says Bush Personally Ordered Torture Tactics

Harry Wainwright h-wainwright at charter.net
Mon Oct 29 21:23:41 EDT 2007


AlterNet


General Says Bush Personally Ordered Torture Tactics


By Nick Juliano, Raw Story
Posted on October 24, 2007, Printed on October 29, 2007
http://www.alternet.org/story/66035/


More than 100,000 pages of newly released government documents to
demonstrate how US military interrogators "abused, tortured or killed"
scores of prisoners rounded up since Sept. 11, 2001, including some who were
not even expected of having terrorist ties, according to a just-published
book.

In  <http://www.aclu.org/about/staff/administrationoftorture.html>
Administration of Torture, two American Civil Liberties Union attorneys
detail the findings of a years-long investigation and court battle with the
administration that resulted in the release of massive amounts of data on
prisoner treatment and the deaths of US-held prisoners.

"[T]he documents show unambiguously that the administration has adopted some
of the methods of the most tyrannical regimes," write Jameel Jaffer and
<http://www.aclu.org/pdfs/about/aot_excerpt.pdf>  Amrit Singh. "Documents
from Guantanamo describe prisoners shackled in excruciating 'stress
positions,' held in freezing-cold cells, forcibly stripped, hooded,
terrorized with military dogs, and deprived of human contact for months."

Most of the documents on which Administration of Torture is based were
obtained as a result of ongoing legal fights over a Freedom of Information
Act request filed in October 2003 by the ACLU and other human rights and
anti-war groups, the ACLU said in a news release.

The documents show that prisoner abuse like that found at Abu Ghraib prison
in Iraq was hardly the isolated incident that the Bush administration or US
military claimed it was. By the time the prisoner abuse story broke
<http://www.newyorker.com/archive/2004/05/10/040510fa_fact?printable=true>
in mid-2004 the Army knew of at least 62 other allegations of abuse at
different prisons in Iraq and Afghanistan, the authors report.

Drawing almost exclusively from the documents, the authors say there is a
stark contrast between the public statements of President Bush and
then-Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and the policies those and others in
the administration were advocating behind the scenes.

President Bush gave "marching orders" to Gen. Michael Dunlavey, who asked
the Pentagon to approve harsher interrogation methods at Guantanamo, the
general claims in documents reported in the book. 

C 2007 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/66035/

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